The Editor's Blog

Buddhists at loggerheads

‘It’s too confusing for me,’ I heard a student confessing outside Oxford’s Sheldonian Theatre.

To the right was a group of Tibetan exiles with their brightly coloured flags, here to greet the Dalai Lama on the Oxford leg of his UK tour. In the middle, a smaller group of Chinese students with one large red Chinese flag and a poster showing a wedding against the backdrop of the Potala Place – presumably to suggest the ‘happy union’ of China with Tibet.

But to left, was a much larger group of maybe 500 people bearing two big banners which read: ‘Dalai Lama: Stop Lying!’ And for those of us who couldn’t read, they chanted the same lines – like a stuck record, for four hours. ‘But they aren’t Chinese!?’ said the confused student. ‘They’re not Tibetan!?

It was true: I looked but could not spot one Tibetan among them. Although many were garbed in the robes of Tibetan Buddhism, the assembled protesters were overwhelmingly white and British. ‘Why are all these British people protesting against the Dalai Lama?’ the student went on, in his determined fog of un-enlightenment. The simple answer is that they were from the Western Shugden Society which is accusing the Dalai Lama of violating the human rights of Buddhists by ‘banning’ a prayer to Dorje Shugden, a deity central to their practice.

To explain their case they called a press conference at Oxford’s prestigious Randolph Hotel. Spokesperson Kelsang Pema (aka Helen Gradwell) claimed that in recent months hundreds of monks had been expelled from their monasteries and that devotees were being attacked and discriminated against in Tibetan communities in India. She claimed that more than a third of Tibetan exiles were adherents of the practice. Tibetan refugee Diki Dolma, who has connections with both Britain and India commented: ‘That’s nonsense! We know the Tibetan exile community and we know it’s just not true. Very, very few follow this practice. I feel sorry for these protesters. I think they don’t know much about Buddhism. They make out they are monks, but, look they don’t even know how to wear their robes properly!’

The emergence of such an orchestrated protest at this time – and the personalized and vituperative nature of the attacks against the Dalai Lama – raises other questions. ‘We are not connected with China,’ insists Helen Gradwell. ‘The Dalai Lama is mixing politics up with religion but we are not. We are not political. We have no position on Tibetan autonomy.’ Asked whether it bothered her that protesting at this time might be playing into the hands of the Chinese authorities, she said that the fault lay with the Dalai Lama for banning the prayer.

To add to the confusion the Office of Tibet in London claims that the Dalai Lama has not banned the prayer. He is ‘advising’ against it – but saying that those who choose to ignore his advice this cannot expect to attend his teachings. He considers Dorje Shugden a ‘fierce spirit’ which can be used to curse others. Devotion to this spirit is seen as encouraging sectarianism, harming the prospects for Tibetan autonomy and, indeed, the Dalai Lama’s own longevity.

In 1997 Indian police investigations linked the murder of three Tibetan monks, who had been outspoken in critics of Shugden practice, to members of the Dorje Shugden Society who escaped over the border to Tibet. The Chinese have been actively encouraging Tibetans to practise the Shugden school as a way of reducing the power of the Dalai Lama, said a spokesperson from the Free Tibet Campaign.

When monks in Tibet’s Ganden monastery destroyed a statue to Dorje Shugden they were arrested by the Chinese authorities and ordered to pay for a replacement. The fact that the Dalai Lama is being accused of precisely the charges he levels against the Chinese authorities – abuse of human rights, lack of freedom of speech – has not gone unnoticed by his supporters.

‘We assume that China is behind it but we don’t have the evidence to prove it,’ said one Tibetan exile, who did not want to be named. Towards the end of the demo in Oxford a man standing close to the Shugden contingent started up his own separate and not altogether intelligible chant. Nearby, I could hear a tall British monk saying into his mobile phone, ‘It’s alright now. The police are coming for him.’ And sure enough the man was promptly bundled off by two officers.

‘What about his freedom of speech?’ I asked one of the Shugden stewards. ‘He was just causing trouble,’ came the reply. Er…


 |  See posts tagged with:  buddhism  china  human rights  tibet


Comments

Poor Journalism
I'm sorry but this is very poorly researched. The following article published in New Internationalist about 10 years ago seems better informed:

http://www.newint.org/issue304/update.htm

You could also try the Swiss TV documentary on this which is available on Youtube and the recent France24 documentary.

Johnny on 09/18/2008 | view this user's profile

This article is full of misinformation and sounds subjective rather than journalistic, as if Vanessa Baird cannot believe that anyone other than Chinese could find a fault in the Dalai Lama.

I notice that you had comments on this article not too long ago but that these have all been removed, so I am reluctant to write more in case you plan on deleting these comments again? Please advise.

In the meantime, your readers may be interested in looking at other points of view on www.WisdomBuddhaDorjeShugden.org or www.aboutwss.org.

Thank you.

Lyara on 09/18/2008 | view this user's profile

Missing comments
Hi Lyara,

Thank you for your comments. If you've been here before, you might notice that we recently re-designed the blog section of the NI site.

During this re-design, we replaced the commenting system that we were using to make the process of registering and submitting comments easier.

Unfortunately, we have not had time to migrate all of the comments that were in the old system yet. Rest assured it's on our (long) list of things to do.

This new blog just went online a day or two ago ... so please be patient. We'll have those old comments back up in no time.

Best,

Phillip.

phillip_at_newint on 09/18/2008 | view this user's profile

France 24 TV documentary
Here is the URL for the documentary mentioned in the first comment:

http://www.france24.com/en/20080808-dalai-lama-demons-india-buddhism-dorje-shugden

Lyara on 09/18/2008 | view this user's profile

The New Statesman on this controversy
And finally, the UK periodical, The New Statesman, recently featured this controversy in four parts, each of which attracted a great deal of attention. Here is the last of the four parts:

http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/the-faith-column/2008/08/dalai-lama-china-tibet

Lyara on 09/18/2008 | view this user's profile

Missing comments
Thanks Phillip!

Lyara on 09/19/2008 | view this user's profile

the other side
For people to make an informed opinion of this dispute it is good to understand the nature and history of the practice. This can be done by examining this academic paper (written by a Buddhist scholar who completed the Geshe degree and teaches in a university):
http://vajrayogini.com/option,com_docman/task,doc_view/gid,159/Itemid,48/

You can also examine these websites for another view:

http://westernshugdensociety.wordpress.com/

and the view of HHDL:

www.dalailama.com

There are historical reasons that this practice is problematic, and the statement that Shugden devotees are completely non-political is inaccurate. Some are very political, such as Kundeling Losang Yeshe who has vocally approved the occupation of Tibet by the PRC.

Khedrup on 09/20/2008 | view this user's profile

Let's stay on solid ground...
Dear Johnny, it's the same old way of Shugden followers, what does not follow their point of view is "poor journalism" while their propaganda sites are very good and reliable?

Dear Lyra,
please don't misinform the reader, it is not New Statesman who offers the four articles but the columns were written by a follower and representative of the highly controversial Kundeling lama. The articles lack sources and claim things which are his beliefs but not necessarily true.

My response to that is this:
http://buddhism-and-fundamentalism.blogspot.com/

Also my unlock page may be of help for another perspective:

http://info-buddhism.com/Western_Shugden_Society_unlocked.html

Best Wishes, Tenzin

Tenzin on 09/20/2008 | view this user's profile

Video by A Buddhist Monastery
To balance France 24 this Video by Buddhist monks and nuns from the Buddhist Monastery Path Hue, Frankfurt am Main, Germany maybe also of help:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Q6X8COBIUk

Tenzin on 09/20/2008 | view this user's profile

solid ground
Tenzin,

You are saying that the France 24 documentary and the Swiss documentary from 1998 are not solid ground? You are also saying that the 1998 article from New Internationalist is not solid ground?

None of these sources are from WSS.

This article quotes no sources and merely repeats the claims made by the Dalai Lama without any critical examination. No antithesis is offered so we can explore the issue.

The underlying theme seems to be that the word of the Dalai Lama cannot be questioned. Understandable if he is a spiritual leader. Unhealthy if he is political.

In the article, the opinion of an anonymous Tibetan bystander is taken in itself as proof. For a magazine that is usually fairly sceptical, not to say iconoclastic, this is not normal behaviour. It shows how much we in the West want to believe in the myth of Tibet.

Johnny on 09/21/2008 | view this user's profile

the other side
Khedrup,

If Kundeling Losang Yeshe has approved the occupation by PRC, then he is in very good company as the Dalai Lama himself accepted PRC government in the mid 90s.

Johnny on 09/21/2008 | view this user's profile

Solid Ground
I didn't judge the France 24 TV or Swiss TV production previously. I criticized your approach of blaming articles not supporting Shugden followers's pov as "poor journalism".
Maybe you read my post again.

Regarding France 24 TV the contribution is not that bad, but the claim of Shugden worship is a religion and 4 Millions would practice it is just wrong and has no solid ground and support by independent academic research - it is just exaggeration, I guess they took it from Shugden followers' claims and didn't verify it. Also that there is Apartheid and persecution is heavily exaggerated. It is clear that there are injustices but please at both sides!

The Swiss Breakfast TV, 10 o'clock, appears to me was another victim of the search for something spectacular or controversial and believing what them was told, e.g. to "ban" Shugden worship would be similar like if the pope would ban the worship of Maria Magdalena. Many of the claims were later approved to be wrong and they received so many complaints that they were forced to balance in some further TV contribution the claims of the first production. In Swiss there are many Tibetans who just know it better. Sadly these TV productions, balancing the first one, NKT/WSS never mentions....

I saw that video as a preparation to increase our fighting force in NKT for the last protests (1996-98). The mood and atmosphere which was build up was like I know it from the brainwashing in the east German army - to fight the enemy of our working class, the evil imperialists. I wondered about this and also why Buddhist who claim to suffer so much do not remember Karma.

Later I could recognize more strange stuff and inconsistencies. I collected some of them here:
http://westernshugdensociety.wordpress.com/2008/08/12/a-former-dorje-shugden-followers-thoughts/

The response of the TGIE which corrects some of the wrong claims can be seen here:
http://dalailama.com/page.157.htm

Don't forget, I know both sides quite well and I know now how dictatorships function. I didn't expect to meet a Buddhist dictatorship in the guise of NKT. However I learnt my lesson.

Keep you chins up friend.

My response to France 24 is this:
http://westernshugdensociety.wordpress.com/2008/09/09/a-forgotten-perspective-who-is-persecuted/

and don't say this is not sourced ;-)

Tenzin on 09/22/2008 | view this user's profile

poor journalism
Sorry Tenzin,

You have not disproved the original complaint.

That there is discussion and disagreement surrounding this question is widely accepted.

However, this article does not even attempt to investigate the issues. Which is what is badly needed.

Instead, it merely repeats the claim of the Dalai Lama that Dorje Shugden practitioners are Chinese agents. It is this very claim that the WSS object to. That the NI just repeats it without any disclaimer is unusual given that the NI does not normally kowtow to reputations.

Johnny on 09/23/2008 | view this user's profile

@Johnny
I think we discuss in different directions. Best Wishes.

Tenzin on 09/24/2008 | view this user's profile

Al Jazeera coverage of the Dalai Lama's ban
Check out this footage on the Dalai Lama's ban of Dorje Shugden shown yesterday to a potential audience of 40 million:

Video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqON2lxArek

News article:

http://english.aljazeera.net/programmes/peopleandpower/2008/...

One interesting point made by the lawyer is that the main reason the legal case against the Dalai Lama was delayed three months was because the Dalai Lama said he was sick/exhausted. Is it possible that the Dalai Lama threw off his European teaching engagements to delay the troublesome court case rather than because he was actually exhausted?

Lyara on 10/01/2008 | view this user's profile

Trouble in Paradise -- another news article
"The political undertones that surround Tibet make this issue all the more sensitive. With political, as well as religious, unity at stake, both sides have begun to ponder what a rift might mean for the future of Tibet. This presents a particular point of interest to the West. For decades, the Dalai Lama has been revered as a champion of peace and, as a result, we have developed a particular soft spot in our heart for him. However, if the claims made by the Western Shugden Society are true, and there is actual religious persecution occurring in Tibet and in the exiled communities, will the West be willing to confront our champion of peace on this issue? I am not suggesting that the claims are definite; however, if the problem persists and persecution becomes an undeniable reality, we will have to decide what is more valuable to us, a united Tibetan community able to reach an agreement with the Chinese or our basic belief in religious freedom."

To read the full article: http://www.qcknightnews.com/home/index.cfm?event=displayArticle&ustory_id=3a756613-6805-4235-9d11-e90606184a6d

Lyara on 10/01/2008 | view this user's profile

Hard for Us -- Dalai Lama and Religious Freedom
And one more recent news article to show New Internationalist readers more of what is going on, taken from Cincinnati City Beat:

Myths about the Dalai Lama abound in the West. He is not, in fact, the head of Buddhism around the world; he isn't even the head of Tibetan Buddhism. Before the Chinese invasion, he didn't preside over Shangri-la; Tibet was a feudal society, a place of extreme poverty ruled by a theocracy supported by a wealthy nobility.

While the Dalai Lama smiles beatifically, his policies as head of the Tibetan Government in Exile have suppressed religious freedom.

At issue is a devotional practice the Dalai Lama once followed but has now decided to stamp out. This involves honoring Dorje Shugden, a wisdom Buddha who is an important part of the lineage that GSL Monastery and millions of Tibetans follow.

The Dalai Lama hasn't simply discouraged honoring Dorje Shugden. Declaring the deity an evil spirit, he's vowed to crush the tradition.

The Tibetan Government in Exile denies identity cards to Tibetan nationals who refuse to sign oaths renouncing the deity, leaving them unable to travel, hold jobs or receive aid, according to Lisa Farnsworth, a law professor at Indiana University. Monks who hold fast to their loyalty to Dorje Shugden have been expelled from monasteries, she says, and others have been denied food or barred from participating in prayer rituals.

"We're talking about basic human rights -- being able to eat, being able to have housing, (not) having your life threatened," Farnsworth says. "You can talk about love and compassion all you want, but people are being hurt by the Dalai Lama's actions."

The issue attracted attention earlier this summer when a crowd leaving the Dalai Lama's lecture in New York City started heckling Dorje Shugden followers who held signs saying, "Dalai Lama, Give Us Religious Freedom." Police officers urged the protesters to leave the scene for their own safety.

"There were 50 police officers there who said, 'We can't protect you. You've got to get on the buses and get out of here,' " Farnsworth says.

Farnsworth is a lay student at Dagom Tensung Ling Monastery in Bloomington, Ind., GSL's "sister" monastery.

"There was one primary reason why we established our monastery: to preserve our lineage," Kuten Lama says. "The hardship is because (the Dalai Lama) took our religious freedom, our human rights. But it is very hard for us ordinary persons to explain to the world because he is so powerful and famous and our words are not too important."

Lyara on 10/01/2008 | view this user's profile

Dalai Lama monks bomb Shugden residence
Here is a news article from Radio Free Asia:

http://www.rfa.org/english/news/tibet/tibetans-10022008095355.html

'Terrorist actions'

The security official said: "They carried out terrorist actions...If they don't appeal, they will be taken to Kongpo for imprisonment 10 days after sentencing. None had lodged an appeal by Sept. 30."

I got this interesting comment from: http://wisdombuddhadorjeshugden.blogspot.com/2008/10/newsflash-tibetan-terrorists-bomb.html

What makes this particularly horrible is that these terrorists were supposedly Buddhist monks, training in monasteries!

Moreover, the actions of these monks were clearly motivated by allegiance to the Dalai Lama, the supposed champion of peace and non-violence:

"No one was hurt in the blasts, three of which occurred at a Chinese military base camp, one at the Markham county office, three at an electric power transmission station, and one at the residence of a Tibetan who worships Shugden, a controversial deity espoused by Beijing but regarded with suspicion by those loyal to the Dalai Lama."

The followers of the Dalai Lama cannot blame this one on Chinese sympathizers trying to stir up trouble because three of the bombings were at Chinese military base camps.And although Robert Thurman has falsely accused Shugden practitioners of being the Taliban of Tibetan Buddhism, there is no proof that any Shugden practitioner has ever been engaged in acts of terrorism. However, this is more clear proof that certain followers of the Dalai Lama -- and monks at that -- are no better than terrorists.

Thankfully, this time, no one was hurt; but, as Shugden practitioners have been pointing out, they are constantly subject to persecution and violence due to the Dalai Lama's repressive ban, and it is only a matter of time before one of them is killed.

The Dalai Lama and his government need to ask themselves some hard questions, including why monks loyal to them are engaged in such acts of pre-meditated violence and how an innocent Dorje Shugden practitioner could come to be the target of such violence.

Lyara on 10/03/2008 | view this user's profile

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